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- WPBeginner Spotlight 25: Let AI Build Your WordPress Forms, Clean Your Database, and Boost Your Fundraisingby Editorial Staff on 30/06/2026 at 10:00
Welcome to the June edition of WPBeginner Spotlight! If there is one story this month, it’s AI becoming more integrated into WordPress. With the new WordPress Abilities API catching on fast, your favorite plugins are letting assistants like Claude and ChatGPT actually do the work… Read More » The post WPBeginner Spotlight 25: Let AI Build Your WordPress Forms, Clean Your Database, and Boost Your Fundraising first appeared on WPBeginner.
- How to See WPBeginner Articles First in Google (In 2 Clicks)by Editorial Staff on 25/06/2026 at 08:18
If you love WordPress and rely on WPBeginner for tutorials, tips, and guides, then we want to show you an easy way to make sure you can easily find WPBeginner tutorials when you search on Google. Google search offers a feature called ‘Preferred Sources.’ This… Read More » The post How to See WPBeginner Articles First in Google (In 2 Clicks) first appeared on WPBeginner.
- 9 Link Building Methods That Actually Work for WordPress Sites by Allison on 24/06/2026 at 10:00
If you’ve been publishing content on your WordPress site but your traffic still isn’t growing, then the missing piece often isn’t more content. It’s backlinks. Link building is the process of getting other websites to link to your content. These links help search engines see… Read More » The post 9 Link Building Methods That Actually Work for WordPress Sites first appeared on WPBeginner.
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- ThreatsDay: AI Compute Hijacking, Apple Email Flaw, BlueHammer Ransomware + 14 Storiesby info@thehackernews.com (The Hacker News) on 02/07/2026 at 15:24
This week’s security news is mostly about weak spots. Browsers, bots, sandboxes, AI systems, and email flows all show the same problem in different ways. Everything looks normal until someone tests a small gap and finds a way through. This is not one big break. It is small permissions, weak checks, open systems, and normal tools doing things they were allowed to do. That same pattern runs
- ToddyCat-Linked Umbrij Malware Abuses OAuth to Access Gmail via Google APIby info@thehackernews.com (The Hacker News) on 02/07/2026 at 13:04
The threat actor known as ToddyCat has been attributed to a new malware called Umbrij that's designed to gain surreptitious access to a victim's email correspondence via the Google API. "In this campaign, the attackers focused their attention on corporate email communications hosted on Gmail, targeting access compromise via APIs," Kaspersky said in a detailed report published this week. "
- Identity Lifecycle Management Wasn't Built for AI Agents by info@thehackernews.com (The Hacker News) on 02/07/2026 at 11:30
Identity lifecycle management was architected around a person with an employment record, a manager, and a departure date. AI agents have none of those. As autonomous principals proliferate across enterprise environments, the governance model built for humans develops structural blind spots that traditional IGA tools weren't designed to detect. This guide covers where that model breaks, what it
- AI Agent Exploits Langflow RCE to Automate Database Ransomware Attackby info@thehackernews.com (The Hacker News) on 02/07/2026 at 09:13
Security firm Sysdig says it has found what it believes is the first ransomware attack run from start to finish by an AI agent. Its Threat Research Team calls the operator JADEPUFFER and says a large language model handled the whole job: breaking in, stealing credentials, moving deeper into the network, then encrypting and wiping a company's production database. Ransomware has always
- FortiBleed Credential Theft Linked to INC and Lynx Ransomware Operationsby info@thehackernews.com (The Hacker News) on 02/07/2026 at 08:00
The recently discovered financially-motivated FortiBleed campaign has been attributed to INC and Lynx ransomware operations, indicating that the verified, stolen credentials were intended for follow-on intrusions. "An operator tied to FortiBleed's infrastructure was found actively working negotiation panels for both groups, tying mass FortiGate credential theft directly to ransomware deployment








